McCracken v. McCracken

24 Pa. D. & C. 367, 1935 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 426
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lawrence County
DecidedApril 22, 1935
Docketno. 2
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Pa. D. & C. 367 (McCracken v. McCracken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lawrence County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCracken v. McCracken, 24 Pa. D. & C. 367, 1935 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 426 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1935).

Opinion

Hildebrand, P. J.,

In a feigned issue to determine who is entitled to the proceeds of a fire insurance policy paid into court, the plaintiff having filed his declaration and defendant his plea and answer, the plaintiff has demurred to defendant’s answer and asked for judgment, while the defendant has moved for judgment in his favor on the whole record.

By the will of John McCracken, dated April 30, 1907, a farm of 35 acres situate in Scott Township, Lawrence County, Pa., was devised to Charles McCracken, the defendant, for and during the term of his natural life and upon his death to his child or children by any future wife or wives, the testator providing that Carrie McCracken, the then wife of Charles McCracken, and her two children by the said Charles McCracken should not take any interest in the said farm or in decedent’s estate, and further providing that, in case the said Charles McCracken should die without leaving any such child or children by a future wife or wives, then the said farm was to go to his son, Jake McCracken, the plaintiff. There is nothing in the record to indicate a severance of the marriage re[368]*368lation between the defendant and his wife, Carrie, or that the defendant is the father of any child or children by a wife other than his said wife, Carrie. Under the terms of the will the defendant became, and has since continued to be, a life tenant of said farm and the plaintiff became, and has since continued to be, a contingent remainderman.

In February 1930, there was issued by the Washington Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Lawrence County an insurance policy providing indemnity to the plaintiff against two thirds of all direct loss or damage by fire to the frame dwelling house located on said farm. In making application for the insurance the plaintiff represented in writing that he was the sole owner of the land upon which were located the buildings insured and that no other person was interested in the property. The policy of insurance, by reason of the payment of assessments, was in full force and effect on August 30,1933, when the dwelling house on said farm was totally destroyed by fire. The plaintiff paid all premiums and assessments against said policy and had paid all premiums and assessments on previous similar policies. No part of the premium was paid by, or charged to, Charles McCracken, the defendant.

The insurance having been claimed by both the plaintiff and the defendant, and payment thereof having been refused by the insurance company, the plaintiff instituted a suit in assumpsit against the company, whereupon the company made no defense to the action but asked and obtained permission to pay into court the face of the policy, $1,200, with accrued interest, the court ordering the plaintiff and defendant to interplead as to the subject matter of the action against the insurance company.

While the defendant makes the bald assertion that the plaintiff, in making application for and in securing insurance, acted as agent for all persons interested in the property insured, and particularly as agent for the defendant, no facts supporting this allegation are averred [369]*369and the averment is based upon the fact that the application was made and the policy issued for the full value of the property and not for the value of the contingent remainder interest of the plaintiff. The defendant contends that the interests of the parties to this action in the fund are identical with their respective interests in the destroyed property and that the defendant, Charles Mc-Cracken, because of his interest as life tenant, is entitled to the use and income of the money's now in court for anc| during his life.

In his brief filed the defendant agrees that the will, the application for the insurance, and the policy itself all being in writing, the whole question is one of law and may be disposed of by the court without the aid of a jury. The plaintiff, by his demurrer, takes the same position. The defendant states the principal question involved to be as follows:

“Where, in an interpleader contest between a life tenant and a remainderman, it appears that the contingent remainderman applied for a policy of insurance and in the application represented himself to be the owner of the entire fee and a policy is issued insuring the entire fee, is not the life tenant entitled to the income from the proceeds of such a policy which have been paid into court?”

Each of the parties had an insurable interest in the property. Neither was bound to insure for the benefit of the other. Either might have insured his own interest separately. They might have joined in insuring the entire fee for the benefit of both. There is nothing in the case indicating that the plaintiff and defendant joined in taking out the insurance or that the plaintiff intended that the insurance taken out should be for the benefit of any person other than himself. It is true that he insured for the full value. By the terms of the policy, however, he secured indemnity only for himself. The defendant urges that to award the entire proceeds of the policy to the plaintiff will permit him to receive more than mere [370]*370indemnity. This defense might have been raised by the insurance company but it was not. In fact, the insurer might have successfully contended that, under the terms of the policy, it was absolutely void by reason of the untrue statements made in plaintiff’s application for the insurance. The question here raised by the defendant is one that can be raised only by the insurer. This is a matter of no concern to the defendant, who was not a party to the insurance contract. The insurer’s waiver of its right furnishes no legal or equitable basis for defendant’s claim against the fund and plaintiff’s possible wronging of the insurance company gives rise to no right in the defendant.

The respective rights of a life tenant and a remainder-man in insurance taken out by one of them upon property in which each has an insurable interest have frequently been before the courts for determination and the decisions are not wholly in accord. Most of the reported cases involve insurance taken out by the life tenant.

Both plaintiff and defendant refer to Welsh v. London Assurance Corp., 151 Pa. 607. In that case the insurer was defendant in an action brought by a life-tenant on a fire insurance policy for the full value of the fee. Plaintiff was permitted to recover the full amount of the policy and was held to be trustee for the remainderman as to the excess of the amount realized over the value of her life interest. There was uncontradicted evidence of the life tenant’s intention to insure the property for herself and the remainderman and of the insurer’s agent’s knowledge that her interest was but that of a life tenant. That case so differs from the present ease in respect to parties, the questions involved and the evidence presented, that it cannot serve as a guide here. The precise question here presented apparently has not been passed upon by our appellate courts.

In a majority of jurisdictions a rule seemingly well supported by reason and known as the Massachusetts rule has been adopted. It is stated in the case of Harrison [371]*371v. Pepper, 166 Mass. 288, 44 N. E.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Pa. D. & C. 367, 1935 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccracken-v-mccracken-pactcompllawren-1935.